Dominantly inherited hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_FCF729184FF9
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Dominantly inherited hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia.
Journal
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
Author(s)
de Lonlay P., Giurgea I., Sempoux C., Touati G., Jaubert F., Rahier J., Ribeiro M., Brunelle F., Nihoul-Fékété C., Robert J.J., Saudubray J.M., Stanley C., Bellanné-Chantelot C.
ISSN
0141-8955 (Print)
ISSN-L
0141-8955
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2005
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
28
Number
3
Pages
267-276
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; ReviewPublication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Congenital hyperinsulinism (HI), the most important cause of hypoglycaemia in early infancy, is a heterogeneous disease with two types of histological lesions, focal and diffuse, with major consequences in terms of surgical approaches. In contrast to focal islet-cell hyperplasia, always sporadic to our knowledge, diffuse hyperinsulinism is a heterogeneous disorder involving several genes, various mechanisms of pathogenic mutations and different transmissions: (i) channelopathy involving the genes encoding the sulphonylurea receptor (SUR1) or the inward-rectifying potassium channel (Kir6.2) in recessively inherited HI or more rarely dominantly inherited HI; (ii) metabolic disorders implicating the short-chain L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCHAD) enzyme inrecessively inherited HI, the glucokinase gene (GK), the glutamate dehydrogenase gene (GLUD1) when hyperammonemia is associated, dominant exercise-induced HI with still-unknown mechanism, and more recently the human insulin receptor gene in dominantly inherited hyperinsulinism. Thus, dominant HI disorders always correspond to diffuse HI, where most hypoglycaemia occur in infancy, and are sensitive to medical treatment. Channel causes could be due to dominant negative mutation with one abnormality in channels composed of four Kir6.2 subunits and four SUR1 subunits, leading to a complete destruction of the channel structure or function, or due to haploinsufficiency with only one functional allele, leading to 50% of functional protein, which is not sufficient to obtain enough opened channels to maintain the membrane depolarized. Metabolic causes are due to a gain of function of enzyme activity (deregulated enzymes), except for physical exercise-induced hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia, of still-unknown cause. Congenital hyperinsulinism (HI) is the most important cause of hypoglycaemia in early infancy (Aynsley-Green et al 2000; Cornblath et al 1990; Pagliara et al 1973; Thomas et al 1977). The inappropriate oversecretion of insulin is responsible for profound hypoglycaemia that requires aggressive treatment to prevent severe and irreversible brain damage (Volpe 1995). HI is a heterogeneous disease associated with several genes, various mechanisms of pathogenic mutations and different transmissions (Dunne et al 2004).
Keywords
Exercise, Genes, Dominant, Glucokinase/genetics, Humans, Hyperinsulinism/complications, Hyperinsulinism/genetics, Hypoglycemia/etiology, Hypoglycemia/genetics, Insulin/physiology, Insulin/secretion, Mutation/genetics, Receptor, Insulin/genetics
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
20/10/2016 17:16
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:27
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